The Effect of Using Principal Components to Create Plausible Values

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Abstract

In all large scale educational surveys such as PISA and TIMSS the distribution of student abilities is estimated using the method of plausible values. This method treats student abilities within each country as missing variables that should be imputed based upon both student responses to cognitive items and a conditioning model using background information from questionnaires. Previous research has shown that, in contrast to creating single estimates of ability for each individual student, this technique will lead to unbiased population parameters in any subsequent analyses, provided the conditioning model is correctly specified (Wu in Studies in Educational Evaluation 31:114–128, 2005). More recent research has shown that, even if the conditioning model is incorrectly specified, the approach will provide a good approximation to population parameters as long as sufficient cognitive items are answered by each student (Marsman, Maris, Bechger, & Glas in Psychometrika 81:274–289, 2016). However, given the very large amount of background information collected in studies such as PISA, background variables are not all individually included in the conditioning model, and a smaller number of principal components are used instead. Furthermore, since no individual student answers cognitive items from every dimension of ability, we cannot rely on sufficient items having been answered to ignore possible resulting misspecification in the conditioning model. This article uses a simple simulation to illustrate how relying upon principal components within the conditioning model could potentially lead to bias in later estimates. A real example of this issue is provided based upon analysis of regional differences in performance in PISA 2015 within the UK.

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Benton, T. (2019). The Effect of Using Principal Components to Create Plausible Values. In Springer Proceedings in Mathematics and Statistics (Vol. 265, pp. 293–306). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01310-3_26

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